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Here are my best movie awards for films I watched in 2013. As always, several of these may have crude language, violence, and/or sexual situations. If you want to know the content of any of these films, go to movieguide.org or pluggedin.com.

This film was so good, I saw it twice in the theater; the second time with a bunch of buddies after which we went to a bar to further discuss the film (later, one friend wrote up a "review" of sorts here). The movie asks some hard-hitting questions about fatherhood, fate, and the role of each in our lives. The film is basically filmed in three parts... it starts by following the life of Luke (played by Ryan Gosling), a loser with a temper who wants to do right by his son but can't pull himself out of his sinful and criminal past. About halfway through, it switches protagonists to Avery (played by Bradley Cooper), who is trying to get out from under his own father's shadow. Then last of all, the film again switches its character focus to look at the lives of Luke's and Avery's sons. I won't spoil it beyond that, but I highly recommend this film as the most thought-provoking of the year.

Most of the comedies I saw this year were not funny. So it wouldn't have taken much to win this category, but along came this film which blew the other ones out of the water. Starring Steve Carell (in a serious role, ironically enough) and Sam Rockwell (in a brilliantly hilarious role), this coming-of-age movie about two single parents taking their kids on a joint summer vacation gives you a lot of laughs while saying some good things about marriage, being a man, and other hard topics.

Just like last year, this is a tight category with so many good action films in 2013. But there really isn't any movie that could be in the top spot except this one. I saw Gravity in IMAX 3D, which is really the best way to see this ground-breaking, breath-snatching film. If you haven't been living under a rock in the last four months, then you know the basic premise: a team of astronauts gets stranded floating in space. On paper, it may seem like a concept that offers little in terms of plot but plenty of physics-defying holes. But in reality, while simple, the plot and script was powerful, profound, and well-executed. And, contrary to some negative comments I've heard, the ending was perfect.

Whew, this was a tight category, with two deserving films in "Frozen" and "Wreck-It Ralph". But ultimately, I had to go with the one that had the best (and most unexpected) messages. "Frozen" isn't perfect, but I thought it largely avoided the ditch of "real princesses don't need men" and the other ditch of "evil is just misunderstood", all the while ridiculing the silly notion of love at first sight and the typical fairy tale plot twist involving "love's true kiss". Love is depicted as something that reveals itself through sacrifice, not infatuation. Our whole family loved this movie.

I didn't see a lot of foreign films this year, so the options are a tad limited. This Norwegian film offers a stark look at life in a real-life boys' juvenile detention center in Norway about a century back.